Application Management

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Revision as of 10:26, 14 December 2019 by Slughorn (Talk | contribs) (How to find Applications)

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Application Management
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Introduction

Most people do not actually use an operating system. They use applications. GhostBSD is designed to provide a desktop and full-featured environment for applications.

"GhostBSD is based on TrueOS with FreeBSD 12 STABLE"
"When FreeBSD 13 STABLE gets released, GhostBSD will be upgraded to TrueOS with FreeBSD 13 STABLE."ericbsd

Function

GhostBSD supports a wide variety of web browsers, office suites, email readers, graphics programs, programming environments, network servers, and just about everything else you might want.

Ways to get applications

There are different ways to get applications. A small part is preinstalled.
Ghost-/FreeBSD provides two complementary technologies for installing third-party software: the FreeBSD Ports Collection, for installing from source, and packages, for installing from prebuilt binaries. Either method may be used to install software from local media or from the network.

There are a lot of prebuilt packages. You can choose out of more than 30.000 packages.
Some people like to use the command line and others a graphical interface.

Preinstalled Applications

GhostBSD comes with a lot of preinstalled applications, for example:

  • Libreoffice
  • Firefox
  • Thunderbird
  • Caja
  • Brasero
  • Rhythmbox
  • VLC Mediaplayer
  • MATE Terminal
  • Pluma

How to find Applications

On GhostBSD are different ways to find an application:

Manage prebuilt Packages

Using the command line

Using GUI

Using Ports

Most of these applications can be built using the FreeBSD Ports Collection.

Using other Ways